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What’s the Story?
A discovery engine for meaningful knowledge, fueled by cross-disciplinary curiosity.
A Brain Pickings project edited by Maria Popova in partnership with Noodle.
Twitter: @explorer
Jad Abumrad
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We live our lives at human speed, we experience and interact with the world on a human time scale. But this hour, we put ourselves through the paces, peek inside a microsecond, and master the fastest thing in the universe.

Fantastic new Radiolab episode about speed stretches the human scale to a breaking point. Complement with Bill Cosby’s strategies for speed-reading

Radiolab has dome more for science storytelling than anyone since Carl Sagan and is supported by audience contributions – make yours here

Wisdom on creativity from Radiolab’s Jad Abumrad, visually synthesized here by Wendy MacNaughton.
I don’t think change can be planned — I think it’s only something that can be recognized after the fact.
My own philosophy on storytelling is that people don’t want to be told how to feel but they do want to be told what to pay attention to. One of the most basic ways to do this when you’re telling a story is to use what’s sometimes called a “pointing arrow,” or signposting. Right before something happens, drop in a little phrase like…”and that’s the moment when everything changed”…or…” and that’s when things got interesting.” Those phrases are like little arrows that tell the listeners: pay attention to what’s about to happen because it’s important. (We use these mercilessly in Radiolab, too much perhaps). Anyhow. I felt like as I was living inside the story I’m telling you now, I’d periodically bump into these pointing arrows, but I could never predict when they’d appear or where they’d lead.

Jad Abumrad shares insights on storytelling from Radiolab’s origin story

“Change cannot be planned, it can only be recognized.”
Wisdom from Radiolab’s Jad Abumrad (and his hands) by artist Wendy MacNaughton (previously), from her illustrated chronicle of the 99% Conference.

“Change cannot be planned, it can only be recognized.”

Wisdom from Radiolab’s Jad Abumrad (and his hands) by artist Wendy MacNaughton (previously), from her illustrated chronicle of the 99% Conference.